A bevy of new products from major manufacturers doesn’t necessarily make it a year to remember in the world of consumer electronics. •In 2013, Apple released not one but two smartphones, and the most memorable feature on either is a fingerprint scanner that doesn’t always work. •Microsoft and Sony refreshed their popular gaming consoles, though the new versions included only incremental upgrades despite several years between releases.•Samsung thought slightly out of the box with the Galaxy Gear smartwatch but was roundly criticized for bringing to market a gadget most consumers wouldn’t touch at the $300 price tag.•Time pegged a $35 thingamajig — the Snickers-size Google Chromecast streaming device — as the top gadget for 2013. •Former New York Times tech columnist David Pogue, now with Yahoo, selected T-Mobile‘s “uncarrier” strategy as the “best new tech idea of the year.” Pogue said he was impressed with T-Mobile’s decision to eliminate a few of the things consumers hate most about cellphone-service providers, such as the two-year contract commitment. •Rather than list my top gadgets of 2013, I asked five Colorado technology executives and entrepreneurs for their thoughts, from personal experience, on the year’s best products. They selected one gadget that stood out from the rest.

Gadget:AliveCor iPhone case, which essentially turns the phone into a mobile heart monitor that can check a person’s heart rate and other measurements.

Price: $200

Why: “I’ve had three people collapse in front of me at different events or in airports,” Hudson said. “Each time they collapse, one of the things you need to figure out is: Do they have a normal pulse? Is their heart beating? Is it a normal rhythm? So I got this new case so that I could use it on the next person that collapses in front of me.”

Hudson has used it on a few people who had mentioned that they felt like their heart was skipping.

“It’s more for doctors, I think, but it’s pretty cool and works pretty well,” he said. “It’s a small case. It doesn’t add that much space to it.”

Why: “The completely hands-free and always-on-and-listening voice-command feature on (this phone) is game-changing,” Kirkpatrick said. “I love having the ability to simply say, ‘OK, Google’ and make the magical device do my bidding. This is extremely useful for calendar appointments, notes and messaging. It’s a taste of the future we have been waiting for.”

I reviewed the Moto X in September and was also impressed with the device’s voice-recognition capability.

For full disclosure, Estes handles social media for the Denver-based startup that created the Roost. But Estes isn’t alone in his excitement for the product. The Roost raised nearly $190,000 this year on Kickstarter from 2,448 backers, blasting through its initial goal of $9,300.

Why: “After having countless amps and speaker setups, I realized all I wanted was clean audio that is easy to set up,” Reubenstein said. “The Playbar delivers great sound, is simple to set up, and, by using your TV as the switch, whatever sound is on the TV is on the Playbar.”

He also likes the ability to control the speaker with his iPhone and the option to connect it to other Sonos devices.

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